DIZZY ANNOUNCE SPRING TOUR

DIZZY ANNOUNCE 2019 TOUR DATESIncludes Headline Show at The Mod Club + Shows With Tokyo Police Club

BAND NOMINATED FOR TWO 2019 JUNO AWARDS “BREAKTHROUGH GROUP OF THE YEAR” & “ALTERNATIVE ALBUM OF THE YEAR”

DEBUT LP BABY TEETH OUT NOW VIA ROYAL MOUNTAIN RECORDS

Canadian dream-pop band Dizzy have announced North American Spring tour dates kicking off with a headline show at Toronto’s The Mod Club on April 16 and including a string of dates supporting Tokyo Police Club. See below for more details and ticket links. The band which is comprised of brothers Alex (guitar), Mackenzie (bass), and Charlie (drums) Spencer, and close friend since 9th grade math class, Katie Munshaw (vocals) recently garnered 2 notable JUNO nominations for “Breakthrough Group of the Year” and “Alternative Album of the Year”, an incredible achievement for a band whose career has just taken off.

The band’s critically acclaimed debut LP Baby Teeth (Royal Mountain/Communion Music) is brimming with electro indie-pop confections that have helped the band reach an impressive 10 million plus streams. The talented four-piece toured the UK and Europe with Rolling Costal Blackout Fever this past fall, performed at the Austin City Limits Festival, and supported Montreal’s Stars on a handful of dates. Currently, Dizzy is working on new music for their anticipated follow-up record.

An eloquent lyricist who grew up inspired by music ranging from alternative (Alvvays, Bright Eyes) to the story telling qualities of country pop (Taylor Swift, Dixie Chicks), Munshaw explains Baby Teeth is “mostly about my late teen years and the time since. Making music always stemmed from my being overly sensitive about everything. When you’re that close to so many people, you’re bound to meet the characters that screw you up enough to start writing about them. Oshawa introduced me to friendship and heartache and change while keeping me bored enough to sit at home and write about it.”

For the Spencer brothers, making music seemed fated—thanks in large part to parents who put instruments in their hands at an early age. “They always encouraged us to learn the way we wanted to, whether that was by taking lessons or just learning songs we liked by listening to them,” Charlie recalls. Suburban boredom was another driving force behind their interest in music, and once they found a kindred spirit in Munshaw, the band began to take shape. An auspicious and fully realized debut, Baby Teeth marks the exciting arrival of a young Canadian band whose career is just beginning.